Between Man and God: Issues in Judaic Thought

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Greenwood Publishing Group, Jun 30, 2001 - Religion - 260 pages
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Sicker presents a personal attempt to come to grips with the awesome question, Where was God at Auschwitz? and with it some of the related central issues of Jewish thought and belief. There is a tendency among many writers of contemporary work of theology to argue that the very fact of the Holocaust invalidates traditional Jewish theory and that its long-held ideas about God must therefore be revised radically. However, Jewish thinkers have long asked the equivalent of this troubling question, albeit in reference to other places and times in Israel's history and have offered possible answers, just as we do today. The big difference between then and now is not the enormity of the Holocaust, but the readiness of earlier thinkers to search for meaning without almost cavalierly discarding traditionally cherished ideas and beliefs.

The author argues that modern advocates of radical theological revision actually have little to add to our understanding of the ways of God and even less to a meaningful Judaic perspective on the universe and the relationship between man and God. A second concern is the contemporary argument that because there is no universally accepted theology of Judaism, one is not bound by any particular conception of God, whether of biblical or rabbinic origin. Jewish theology has thus come to be viewed essentially as an equal opportunity field of intellectual endeavor, an approach Sicker considers fundamentally and fatally flawed. Traditional non-dogmatic thought does not require radical revision. What is required is a sympathetic understanding of the theological assumptions and ideas of the past coupled with a sincere and respectful attempt to reformulate them in terms more attuned to the modern temper.

 

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Contents

The Judaic Conception of God
1
The Temporal or Prophetic Paradigm
21
The Experience of the Divine
41
Man the Universe and the Creator
57
The Meaning of Human Existence
75
Man in the Image
89
Man and Providence
97
Mans Moral Autonomy
109
Divine Omniscience and Moral Autonomy
149
Resolving Rabbi Akibas Paradox
165
The Question of Divine Justice
189
Theodicy in Judaic Thought
201
Divine Justice and Human Justice
229
Bibliography
239
Index
255
Copyright

The Good and Evil Impulses
129

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About the author (2001)

MARTIN SICKER is a private consultant and lecturer who has served as a senior executive in the U.S. government and has taught political science at American University and The George Washington University./e Professor Sicker has written extensively in the fields of political science and international affairs, with a special focus on the Middle East. He is the author of sixteen earlier books and is presently associated with the Denver Institute for Jewish Studies.

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